Fort Calgary was a North-West Mounted Police outpost at the confluence of the Bow River and Elbow River rivers in present-day Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Originally named Fort Brisebois, after the outpost's first commander, the outpost was renamed Fort Calgary in June 1876.
The outpost was built in 1875 as a part of the North-West Mounted Police (NWMP) larger effort to curtail American rum and whisky runners in the region, and to establish relationships with the Indigenous peoples of the territory. The palisades were removed in 1882 and the former fort was designated as a "district post". The NWMP used the expanded barracks there until 1914 when the site was sold to Grand Trunk Pacific Railway. The police buildings were demolished to make way for a rail terminal, although the site's significance was later recognized when it was named a National Historic Site in 1925.
In 1975, the municipal government of Calgary purchased a plot of land that included the National Historic Site and reopened it as Fort Calgary Historic Park in 1978. The historic park initially documented the NWMP role in the area, although its scope was expanded to focus on the Calgary's history in 1995. Reconstruction of several former buildings within Fort Calgary took place in the 1990s. In 2024, the Fort Calgary Historic Park was rebranded as The Confluence Historic Site and Parkland to better reflect the historical significance of the area.
By the early 1870s, American whisky and rum runners were conducting trade with First Nations in the area. The illegal trade and American incursion prompted the government of Canada to create the North-West Mounted Police (NWMP) in 1873 to reassert Canadian sovereignty and curtail the whisky trade in the region. By 1874, the NWMP had captured or chased away most of the illegal traders, and had begun work on several forts in the area; believing that the lawlessness seen in the settlement of the American west was preventable if law enforcement was in place before settlers arrived into the area. After Fort Macleod was established, the whisky traders moved their operations further away from it. A decision was made to build an NWMP outpost at the midway point between Fort Macleod and Fort Edmonton in June 1875. "F" Troop, commanded by Éphrem-A. Brisebois, was tasked with establishing the outpost at the midway point.
The outpost had inadequate heating and insulation after it was completed, resulting in poor living conditions for its garrison. Combined with Brisebois' poor leadership, the members of "F" Troop mutinied during the winter of 1875–76 and sent a delegation to the headquarters in Fort Macleod to list out complaints against the commander. Brisebois was not relieved immediately after that incident, although was eventually replaced by Lawrence Herchmer in August 1876. The I. G. Baker Company incorporated the area around the fort as a part of its larger transportation network on the Whoop-Up Trail; and built a trading post and storehouse a few hundred metres away from the fort. The commercial opportunities provided by the transportation network also attracted the Hudson's Bay Company, who relocated their trading post at the Ghost River to the Elbow River across from Fort Calgary. Initially, the outpost also housed a mission of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate, although the mission later relocated upriver in 1875. By 1877, a permanent church was established at the I. G. Baker Company post. During the latter half of the 1870s, the area found itself as a stopover route for travellers going from Fort Benton, Montana to Fort Edmonton.
The decline in the illegal whisky and Bison hunting lessened the need for a fortified outpost in the area, resulting in the fort's detachment to decline to four constables by 1880. However, the situation reversed in the early 1880s, with several plans drafted to develop the area surrounding Fort Calgary. In August 1882, the outpost was designated as a "district post," and its detachment was reinforced to provide a permanent police presence as well as enforce legal ordinances for the Canadian Pacific Railway reserve adjacent to the fort. James Walker, a former NWMP member and owner of the Bow River Saw and Planing Mill was contracted to expand the outpost. The contract called for the construction of a barracks, a guardroom with 12 holding cells, a hospital, officers' quarters, a sergeants' mess, and facilities for tradesmen. To accommodate the outpost's expansion, the fort's palisades were taken down, and several of the outpost's older buildings were razed. The expansion cost the government approximately C$35,000.
From 1882 to 1902, a number of changes were made to the site, and some structures were torn down and replaced with buildings better able to address contemporary needs. Police operations at the fort ended in 1914, after Grand Trunk Pacific Railway bought the site for C$250,000. All the remaining buildings were demolished by Grand Truck Pacific Railway to make way for a rail terminal.
In 1975, the municipal government purchased the site, intending to develop it into a historic site. The city launched an archaeological study of the site to determine the exact location of the demolished fort. That year, archaeologists unearthed parts of the original wooden fort and its artifacts, although they were forced to quickly re-cover them due to their rapid and uncontrolled disintegration while exposed to open air. An interpretive centre was built on the site in 1977.
From 2014 to 2020, a three-phase expansion and restoration project of the historic site occurred, costing approximately C$36 million. The first stage includes restorations to Deane House and Hunt House, while the second phase saw the development of the "F" Troop memorial exhibit. The museum's interpretive centre was renovated and expanded as a part of the final phase of the project. The expansion and renovations of the interpretive centre cost approximately C$10.4 million.
On 2 May 2024 the Fort Calgary Historic Park was rebranded as The Confluence Historic Site and Parkland to better reflect the site's history prior to the fort and to better reflect the location which the site is on.
The site contains several reconstructions of structures that were built within the fort, including the stables, wagon shed, and barracks modelled after the one built in 1888. The reconstructed buildings were completed during the 1990s and 2000. An interpretive centre was also erected on the site in 1977; with the size of the centre expanded to during the 2010s. Exhibits and audio-visual and interactive presentations of Calgary's history and the NWMP are situated in the 1888 barracks and the interpretive centre.
In 2016, an art installation was unveiled at the site, with vertical wood slats topped with metal and placed on the outline of the original fort. The wood slats used for the installation is approximately the same height as the palisades used for Fort Calgary. From a certain angle, the wood slats are shaped to resemble 12 standing figures. The installation is illuminated with red lights during the night. The art installation is titled Marking and was created by Jill Anholt.
In 1973, the city bought the building and turned it into a cooperative studio space for artists and writers and an exhibition space called the Dandelion Gallery. In the summer of 1975, Joan Clark, Edna Alford and Velma Foster published the first edition of Dandelion Magazine, a publication that would become known as Alberta's leading literary magazine. In 1978, the City closed the Dandelion Artists' Cooperative with plans to turn the house into a teahouse and restaurant. Today, the house continues to be owned by the city. It currently features a restaurant called Deane House and has undergone significant renovations as part of the MakeHistory upgrades to Fort Calgary. East Village Free Press Retrieved 22 October 2015
The last person to live in the house was William Hunt, a rail worker, who died in the mid-1970s. It became an Alberta Provincial Historic Resource in 1977.
Post-demolition history
Historic park
Grounds
Related landmarks
Deane House
Hunt House
Affiliations
See also
Notes
Further reading
External links
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